Friday, October 28, 2005

tobacco hornworm


I found this tobacco hornworm on the tomatoes the other day. I thought it was odd to see one so late in the year. Yes, it was a tobacco hornworm not tomato hornworm. The difference is that the tobacco version has diagonal lines on its side and the tomato version has v-shaped figures. One has a red "tail" the other has a darker one. Anyway, I brought it inside and put it in a jar with its attendant tomato leaves. It didn't take long for the little rascal to eat them all. Since the tomato plants did not have any more leaves to spare this time of year and after looking up its favorite plants (those in the solanum family), I decided to place a potato in his jar. Believe it or not, he started eating the potato, then I noticed his droppings also turned a light color. He feasted on this for several days and I finally added another potato and moved him to a new clean jar. He continued to eat and grow. By now I didn't have the heart to destroy him and a freeze had gotten the tomato plants, so I took him back out to the garden and released him on the remains of the tomato plant. Here, he surprised me. He started burrowing into the ground! Now, I didn't know they did this. Is that where they go to turn into the sphinx moth? We shall see......

Thursday, October 27, 2005

great cedar's ghost


Sometime in March every year the cedars in our area, Juniperus virginiana, give off their pollen. It takes on a ghostly appearance. This is not the same cedar that causes "cedar fever" in the Texas hill country.

Monday, October 24, 2005

two ravens

In a canyon on the Guadalupe River. They were soaring, diving, taunting each other. The one in front had a nut in his beak.

Saturday, October 15, 2005

that katydid

Saw a katydid today. First one since we came here 3 years ago. It was hidden within the leaves of a hydrangea. What if I had missed it as he intended? Posted by Picasa
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